>While Loop_

Loops are an important concept in programming and therefore also in scripting.
Thanks to loops you are able to repeat an instruction
automatically several times, until a certain condition turns false.
Two are the main types of loops: while and for. They both generate a repeating
piece of code, but with some key differences
that make them suitable for different needs while programming.
While loops take this form:

while[condition]
do
command1
command2
command3
...
done

Here is a simple first example:

i=0;while[$i-lt 4]
do
echo$ii=$((i +1))done

In this first example, you simply create a variable called i and evaluate it to 0.
Then you access the while loop: the condition [$i -lt 4] means that this while
loop will run until the i variable is less than 4.
Every cycle of this loop, you print out the value of variable i with echo $i
and finally, you increase its value by 1 with i=$((i + 1)).
Therefore in 4 cycles the value of i will be 4. This will make the condition of the while loop false.
The output of this piece of code is:

0
1
2
3

Sometimes it is required to declare infinite loops for various programming purposes.
Here is an example:

No termination condition is set for the loop in this example. This type of loop
is called an infinite loop.
The exit statement is used to quit the loop. This loop will
iterate for 9 times, then
as soon as i becomes equal to 0, the condition of the last if
statement will evaluate to true and the loop will be terminated.
The output of this piece of code is:

1: Hello World
2: Hello World
3: Hello World
I love programming
4: Hello World
5: Hello World
I love Bash
6: Hello World
7: Hello World
I love this website
8: Hello World
9: Hello World

If you want your shell to hang forever doing nothing you can write out the following infinite loop:

while :
do
:
done

In scripting, while loops are often used to process files line by line.
Here is an example:

The read command is used to read a file line by line.
The flag -r is used to tell the
command read to interpret backslashes (/) literally, instead as escape characters.
This command, expect for some few
rare cases, should always be used with this flag.
In this example, < "$file" redirects the loop's input from a file
whose name is stored in a variable.
This file has 3 columns, first_name last_name phone , separated by
blank space (or a tab).
This piece of code only prints out the second column.